Excited riders board Puyuma Express

THE BENDS:：Train driver Tan Ming-te, who also operated the Taroko Express, said the only difference was the way the Puyuma Express tilts when driven through a curve

By Shelley Shan / Staff reporter

Thu, Feb 07, 2013 - Page 4

When graduate student Wang Rong-lu (王融祿) and college senior Shao Chi-hong (邵繼泓) heard the announcement of the launch of the Puyuma Express (普悠瑪號) tilting train earlier this year, they were eager to buy tickets for the maiden service.

Rather than booking regular seats, they decided to book table seats, which the nation’s other tilting train service, the Taroko Express (太魯閣號), does not have. However, the administration required those wanting to book table seats to buy four tickets at a time.

“There were only two of us, so we decided to split the cost of four tickets,” Wang said. “The [table] is a new design and I wanted to see what it was like sitting in a seat facing the opposite direction to the train’s.”

Wang also recalled the difficulty of booking tickets for the first running of the train.

“The first run happened to coincide with the rush for train tickets for the Lunar New Year holidays,” Wang said.

“We both tried to get onto the TRA system as soon as the booking session began at midnight. I got in eventually, but he [Shao] did not. I bought the tickets within five minutes of hitting the ‘refresh’ button a gazillion times,” he said.

They said they planned to take the train all the way to Hualien and take the Puyuma Express again in the afternoon when they returned.

Wang and Shao were two of the excited passengers boarding the new train at Shulin Station yesterday. Others also said that purchasing tickets required a group effort.

However, a woman surnamed Lu (呂) and her six-year-old son got on the train by accident.

She bought tickets for the Tzuchiang Express and thought that they could use them to board the Puyuma Express as well.

“We wanted to get a feel of the new train by traveling from Shulin to Banciao, but I did not know you had to designate the train service. They let me take it anyway. Hopefully, we’ll get to take the Puyuma Express all the way to Hualien next time,” she said.

Another student, surnamed Cheng (鄭), told the Taipei Times that he is from Hualien and left home early to take the Puyuma Express in Shulin.

While some of the passengers appeared to be impressed by the new tilting train’s facilities — velvet fabric-covered seats, spacious washrooms, a nursery room and vending machines — some noticed that the flat-panel screen displaying information about the train was smaller than that on the Taroko Express.

Children may also need help from their parents when boarding the train because it is higher than the platform.

Some also complained that they felt the train shaking when there was a curve in the track.

Train driver Tan Ming-te (譚明德) has been operating trains for more than 20 years. He also operated the Taroko Express when it was first unveiled to the media.

“The only difference [between the two tilting trains] is the way they tilt when driven through a curve,” Tan said.